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Administrative divisions of East Germany

The administrative divisions of the German Democratic Republic (commonly referred to as East Germany) were constituted in two different forms during the country's history. The GDR first retained the traditional German division into federated states called Länder, but in 1952 they were replaced with districts called Bezirke. Immediately before German reunification in 1990, the Länder were restored, but they were not effectively reconstituted until after reunification had completed.

Division into Länder Edit

General background Edit

 
The GDR (in red) with its original Länder.

In May 1945, following its defeat in World War II, Germany was occupied by the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union. All four occupation powers reorganised the territories by recreating the Länder (states), the constituting parts of federal Germany. The state of Prussia, whose provinces extended to all four zones and covered two thirds of Germany, was abolished in 1947.[1]

Special conditions were assigned to Berlin, which the four powers divided into four sectors. A united German state government existed in the city until it broke apart in 1948. After 1949, both West Berlin and East Berlin (officially only called Berlin) were in effect incorporated into the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic, respectively, despite not legally being part of these countries.

Länder in East Germany Edit

In the Soviet occupation zone, five Länder were established which roughly corresponded to the preexisting states and provinces. (The territories east of the Oder–Neisse line had been transferred from the Soviet occupation zone to the Polish authorities as agreed upon at the Potsdam Conference.) The five states were:

In 1949, the Soviet occupation zone was transformed into the German Democratic Republic. The five Länder (and East Berlin, though the latter only with consultative votes) participated in the legislative branch through the Länderkammer (Chamber of States), which was elected by the Landtage (state parliaments). However, the Länder were not constituting entities forming a federal republic (as in West Germany) but rather decentralised administrative entities of a quasi-unitary state.

As a nod to the legal fiction that East Berlin was still occupied territory, it was counted neither as part of Brandenburg, nor as a state in its own right. East Germany claimed East Berlin as its capital, a status recognised by virtually all Eastern Bloc countries. However, the Western Allies (the US, UK, and France) never formally acknowledged the authority of the East German government to govern East Berlin; the official Allied protocol recognised only the authority of the Soviet Union in East Berlin in accordance with the occupation status of Berlin as a whole.[2][3]

Division into Bezirke Edit

 
Bezirke of the GDR (1952–1990).[4]

On 23 July 1952, a law combined the GDR's municipal districts (Kreise) into 14 regional districts (Bezirke), and subsequently, on 25 July 1952, the state governments transferred their administrative tasks to the new regional districts.[5]

With this law, the Länder were in effect dissolved, and the GDR had become a highly centralized state. While they formally remained in existence, they no longer had any political or administrative functions, similar to the situation in Nazi Germany after 1934. The Bezirke were drawn without regard to the borders of the Länder and each named after their capitals, from north to south: Rostock, Neubrandenburg, Schwerin, Potsdam, Frankfurt (Oder), Magdeburg, Cottbus, Halle, Leipzig, Erfurt, Dresden, Karl-Marx-Stadt (named Chemnitz until 1953), Gera and Suhl.

The Länderkammer also remained in existence and its members were elected in 1954 by combined sessions of the Bezirkstage (district assemblies) in each Land and in 1958 directly by the Bezirkstage. However, on 8 December 1958, the Länderkammer and Länder were formally dissolved with no objections being raised by the Länderkammer.

Due to its special status, East Berlin was originally not counted as a Bezirk. In 1961, after the construction of the Berlin Wall, East Berlin came to be recognised in GDR administration as a 15th district, though it retained a special status until the adoption of the 1968 Constitution formally designated it as Bezirk Berlin.[6]

The Bezirke (with the exception of East Berlin, which consisted of a single municipality) were subdivided into rural districts (Landkreise) and urban districts (Stadtkreise):

Bezirk subdivisions
Cottbus Urban districts: Cottbus
Rural districts: Bad Liebenwerda · Calau · Cottbus-Land · Finsterwalde · Forst · Guben (Wokrejs Gubin) · Herzberg · Hoyerswerda · Jessen · Luckau · Lübben · Senftenberg · Spremberg · Weißwasser
Dresden Urban districts: Dresden · Görlitz
Rural districts: Bautzen · Bischofswerda · Dippoldiswalde · Dresden-Land · Freital · Görlitz-Land · Großenhain · Kamenz · Löbau · Meißen · Niesky · Pirna · Riesa · Sebnitz · Zittau
Erfurt Urban districts: Erfurt · Weimar
Rural districts: Apolda · Arnstadt · Eisenach · Erfurt-Land · Gotha · Heiligenstadt · Langensalza · Mühlhausen · Nordhausen · Sömmerda · Sondershausen · Weimar-Land
Frankfurt (Oder) Urban districts: Frankfurt (Oder) · Eisenhüttenstadt · Schwedt/Oder
Rural districts: Angermünde · Bad Freienwalde · Beeskow · Bernau · Eberswalde · Eisenhüttenstadt · Fürstenwalde · Seelow · Strausberg
Gera Urban districts: Gera · Jena
Rural districts: Eisenberg · Gera-Land · Greiz · Jena · Lobenstein · Pößneck · Rudolstadt · Saalfeld · Schleiz · Stadtroda · Zeulenroda
Halle Urban districts: Halle · Dessau · Halle-Neustadt (from 12 May 1967)
Rural districts: Artern · Aschersleben · Bernburg · Bitterfeld · Eisleben · Gräfenhainichen · Hettstedt · Hohenmölsen · Köthen · Merseburg · Naumburg · Nebra · Quedlinburg · Querfurt · Roßlau · Saalkreis · Sangerhausen · Weißenfels · Wittenberg · Zeitz
Karl-Marx-Stadt Urban districts: Karl-Marx-Stadt · Plauen · Zwickau · Johanngeorgenstadt (until 1957) · Schneeberg (until 1958)
Rural districts: Annaberg · Aue · Auerbach · Brand-Erbisdorf · Flöha · Freiberg · Glauchau · Hainichen · Hohenstein-Ernstthal · Karl-Marx-Stadt-Land · Klingenthal · Marienberg · Oelsnitz · Plauen-Land · Reichenbach · Rochlitz · Schwarzenberg · Stollberg · Werdau · Zschopau · Zwickau-Land
Leipzig Urban districts: Leipzig
Rural districts: Altenburg · Borna · Delitzsch · Döbeln · Eilenburg · Geithain · Grimma · Leipzig-Land · Oschatz · Schmölln · Torgau · Wurzen
Magdeburg Urban districts: Magdeburg
Rural districts: Burg · Gardelegen · Genthin · Halberstadt · Haldensleben · Havelberg · Kalbe (Milde) (until December 1987) · Klötze · Loburg (until June 1957) · Oschersleben · Osterburg · Salzwedel · Schönebeck · Seehausen (until July 1965) · Staßfurt · Stendal · Tangerhütte (until December 1987) · Wanzleben · Wernigerode · Wolmirstedt · Zerbst
Neubrandenburg Urban districts: Neubrandenburg (from January 1969)
Rural districts: Altentreptow · Anklam · Demmin · Malchin · Neubrandenburg-Land · Neustrelitz · Pasewalk · Prenzlau · Röbel/Müritz · Strasburg · Templin · Teterow · Ueckermünde · Waren
Potsdam Urban districts: Potsdam · Brandenburg an der Havel
Rural districts: Belzig · Brandenburg · Gransee · Jüterbog · Königs-Wusterhausen · Kyritz · Luckenwalde · Nauen · Neuruppin · Oranienburg · Potsdam · Pritzwalk · Rathenow · Wittstock · Zossen
Rostock Urban districts: Rostock · Greifswald (from January 1974) · Stralsund · Wismar
Rural districts: Bad Doberan · Greifswald Land · Grevesmühlen · Grimmen · Ribnitz-Damgarten · Rostock-Land · Rügen · Stralsund · Wismar · Wolgast
Schwerin Urban districts: Schwerin
Rural districts: Bützow · Gadebusch · Güstrow · Hagenow · Ludwigslust · Lübz · Parchim · Perleberg · Schwerin-Land · Sternberg
Suhl Urban districts: Suhl
Rural districts: Bad Salzungen · Hildburghausen · Ilmenau · Meiningen · Neuhaus · Schmalkalden · Sonneberg · Suhl-Land

List of Bezirke Edit

From north to south, the Bezirke were:

Map Bezirk Area (km²) Population
(1989)
Population density
(people/km²)
Licence
plates
Internal divisions
(1989)
Municipalities
(Gemeinden)
  Rostock 7,075 916,500 130 A 10 Landkreise,
4 Stadtkreise
360
  Schwerin 8,672 595,200 69 B 10 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
389
  Neubrandenburg 10,948 620,500 57 C 14 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
492
  Potsdam 12,568 1,123,800 89 D, P 15 Landkreise,
2 Stadtkreise
755
  Frankfurt (Oder) 7,186 713,800 99 E 9 Landkreise,
3 Stadtkreise
438
  Magdeburg 11,526 1,249,500 108 H, M 17 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
655
  Cottbus 8,262 884,700 107 Z 14 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
574
  Halle 8,771 1,776,500 203 K, V 20 Landkreise,
3 Stadtkreise
684
  Leipzig 4,966 1,360,900 274 S, U 12 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
422
  Erfurt 7,349 1,240,400 169 L, F 13 Landkreise,
2 Stadtkreise
719
  Dresden 6,738 1,757,400 261 R, Y 15 Landkreise,
2 Stadtkreise
594
  Karl-Marx-Stadt* 6,009 1,859,500 309 T, X 21 Landkreise,
3 Stadtkreise
601
  Gera 4,004 742,000 185 N 11 Landkreise,
2 Stadtkreise
528
  Suhl 3,856 549,400 142 O 8 Landkreise,
1 Stadtkreis
358
  Berlin** 403 1,279,200 3,174 I 11 Stadtbezirke 1
DDR 108,333 16,669,300 154 191 Landkreise,
27 Stadtkreise
(+ Ost-Berlin)
7,570

*) The Bezirk Karl-Marx-Stadt was named Bezirk Chemnitz for a short period at both the beginning and end of the republic, corresponding with the renaming and reversal of the city Chemnitz. Between 10 May 1953 and 30 May 1990, both the city and Bezirk were named Karl-Marx-Stadt.
**) East Berlin was not officially a Bezirk, but from 1961 was provided with the function of one.

Reconstitution of the Länder Edit

 
The reconstituted Länder in 1990, with borders in red. The purple borders show the original borders pre-1952.

On 23 August 1990 — just over a month before German reunification on 3 October — East Germany reconstituted the five original Länder. Legally, it was these Länder that then acceded to the Federal Republic of Germany.[5]

In reality, the restored Länder did not fully reconstitute themselves until after reunification. On 14 October 1990, elections to the Landtage (state parliaments) were held in the five new states, initiating the formation of state governments.

Since changes to the boundaries of municipal districts were not reversed, and also due to considerations of expediency, the territorial make-up of the restored Länder differed somewhat from the borders before 1952.

Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt initially retained the rural and urban districts as administrative entities (Regierungsbezirke). Saxony-Anhalt later abolished them in 2003, while Saxony transformed them into directorates in 2008.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Orlow, Dietrich (1986-12-15). Weimar Prussia, 1918–1925: The Unlikely Rock of Democracy. University of Pittsburgh Pre. pp. 3. ISBN 9780822976400. prussia 1947.
  2. ^ "Helpful Hints for US Visitors to East Berlin" (PDF). Headquarters, U.S. Command Berlin. 1981-11-09. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Architecture, Politics, and Identity in Divided Berlin, Emily Pugh, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014, pages 159
  4. ^ Grieder, Peter (2012-11-02). The German Democratic Republic. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. xviii. ISBN 9780230356863.
  5. ^ a b Illing, Falk (2014-10-07). Die sächsische FDP seit 1990: Auf dem Weg zur etablierten Partei? (in German). Springer-Verlag. p. 71. ISBN 9783658046576.
  6. ^ Horváth, Gyula (2014-08-21). Spaces and Places in Central and Eastern Europe: Historical Trends and Perspectives. Routledge. p. 109. ISBN 9781317917540.

External links Edit

  Media related to Subdivisions of the German Democratic Republic at Wikimedia Commons

administrative, divisions, east, germany, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, s. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Administrative divisions of East Germany news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The administrative divisions of the German Democratic Republic commonly referred to as East Germany were constituted in two different forms during the country s history The GDR first retained the traditional German division into federated states called Lander but in 1952 they were replaced with districts called Bezirke Immediately before German reunification in 1990 the Lander were restored but they were not effectively reconstituted until after reunification had completed Contents 1 Division into Lander 1 1 General background 1 2 Lander in East Germany 2 Division into Bezirke 3 List of Bezirke 4 Reconstitution of the Lander 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDivision into Lander EditGeneral background Edit nbsp The GDR in red with its original Lander In May 1945 following its defeat in World War II Germany was occupied by the United States Britain France and the Soviet Union All four occupation powers reorganised the territories by recreating the Lander states the constituting parts of federal Germany The state of Prussia whose provinces extended to all four zones and covered two thirds of Germany was abolished in 1947 1 Special conditions were assigned to Berlin which the four powers divided into four sectors A united German state government existed in the city until it broke apart in 1948 After 1949 both West Berlin and East Berlin officially only called Berlin were in effect incorporated into the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic respectively despite not legally being part of these countries Lander in East Germany Edit In the Soviet occupation zone five Lander were established which roughly corresponded to the preexisting states and provinces The territories east of the Oder Neisse line had been transferred from the Soviet occupation zone to the Polish authorities as agreed upon at the Potsdam Conference The five states were Brandenburg was created out of the major part of the Prussian province of that name Mecklenburg Vorpommern was created out of the state of Mecklenburg reunited out of Mecklenburg Schwerin and Mecklenburg Strelitz only in 1934 and the Western parts of the Prussian province of Pomerania Saxony Sachsen was augmented by the westernmost parts of the Prussian province of Lower Silesia Also the town of Reichenau was ceded to Poland Saxony Anhalt Sachsen Anhalt was created out of the most of the Prussian Province of Saxony and the Free State of Anhalt Thuringia Thuringen was augmented by neighbouring parts from the Prussian provinces of Saxony and Hesse Nassau In 1949 the Soviet occupation zone was transformed into the German Democratic Republic The five Lander and East Berlin though the latter only with consultative votes participated in the legislative branch through the Landerkammer Chamber of States which was elected by the Landtage state parliaments However the Lander were not constituting entities forming a federal republic as in West Germany but rather decentralised administrative entities of a quasi unitary state As a nod to the legal fiction that East Berlin was still occupied territory it was counted neither as part of Brandenburg nor as a state in its own right East Germany claimed East Berlin as its capital a status recognised by virtually all Eastern Bloc countries However the Western Allies the US UK and France never formally acknowledged the authority of the East German government to govern East Berlin the official Allied protocol recognised only the authority of the Soviet Union in East Berlin in accordance with the occupation status of Berlin as a whole 2 3 Division into Bezirke Edit nbsp Bezirke of the GDR 1952 1990 4 On 23 July 1952 a law combined the GDR s municipal districts Kreise into 14 regional districts Bezirke and subsequently on 25 July 1952 the state governments transferred their administrative tasks to the new regional districts 5 With this law the Lander were in effect dissolved and the GDR had become a highly centralized state While they formally remained in existence they no longer had any political or administrative functions similar to the situation in Nazi Germany after 1934 The Bezirke were drawn without regard to the borders of the Lander and each named after their capitals from north to south Rostock Neubrandenburg Schwerin Potsdam Frankfurt Oder Magdeburg Cottbus Halle Leipzig Erfurt Dresden Karl Marx Stadt named Chemnitz until 1953 Gera and Suhl The Landerkammer also remained in existence and its members were elected in 1954 by combined sessions of the Bezirkstage district assemblies in each Land and in 1958 directly by the Bezirkstage However on 8 December 1958 the Landerkammer and Lander were formally dissolved with no objections being raised by the Landerkammer Due to its special status East Berlin was originally not counted as a Bezirk In 1961 after the construction of the Berlin Wall East Berlin came to be recognised in GDR administration as a 15th district though it retained a special status until the adoption of the 1968 Constitution formally designated it as Bezirk Berlin 6 The Bezirke with the exception of East Berlin which consisted of a single municipality were subdivided into rural districts Landkreise and urban districts Stadtkreise Bezirk subdivisionsCottbus Urban districts CottbusRural districts Bad Liebenwerda Calau Cottbus Land Finsterwalde Forst Guben Wokrejs Gubin Herzberg Hoyerswerda Jessen Luckau Lubben Senftenberg Spremberg WeisswasserDresden Urban districts Dresden GorlitzRural districts Bautzen Bischofswerda Dippoldiswalde Dresden Land Freital Gorlitz Land Grossenhain Kamenz Lobau Meissen Niesky Pirna Riesa Sebnitz ZittauErfurt Urban districts Erfurt WeimarRural districts Apolda Arnstadt Eisenach Erfurt Land Gotha Heiligenstadt Langensalza Muhlhausen Nordhausen Sommerda Sondershausen Weimar LandFrankfurt Oder Urban districts Frankfurt Oder Eisenhuttenstadt Schwedt OderRural districts Angermunde Bad Freienwalde Beeskow Bernau Eberswalde Eisenhuttenstadt Furstenwalde Seelow StrausbergGera Urban districts Gera JenaRural districts Eisenberg Gera Land Greiz Jena Lobenstein Possneck Rudolstadt Saalfeld Schleiz Stadtroda ZeulenrodaHalle Urban districts Halle Dessau Halle Neustadt from 12 May 1967 Rural districts Artern Aschersleben Bernburg Bitterfeld Eisleben Grafenhainichen Hettstedt Hohenmolsen Kothen Merseburg Naumburg Nebra Quedlinburg Querfurt Rosslau Saalkreis Sangerhausen Weissenfels Wittenberg ZeitzKarl Marx Stadt Urban districts Karl Marx Stadt Plauen Zwickau Johanngeorgenstadt until 1957 Schneeberg until 1958 Rural districts Annaberg Aue Auerbach Brand Erbisdorf Floha Freiberg Glauchau Hainichen Hohenstein Ernstthal Karl Marx Stadt Land Klingenthal Marienberg Oelsnitz Plauen Land Reichenbach Rochlitz Schwarzenberg Stollberg Werdau Zschopau Zwickau LandLeipzig Urban districts LeipzigRural districts Altenburg Borna Delitzsch Dobeln Eilenburg Geithain Grimma Leipzig Land Oschatz Schmolln Torgau WurzenMagdeburg Urban districts MagdeburgRural districts Burg Gardelegen Genthin Halberstadt Haldensleben Havelberg Kalbe Milde until December 1987 Klotze Loburg until June 1957 Oschersleben Osterburg Salzwedel Schonebeck Seehausen until July 1965 Stassfurt Stendal Tangerhutte until December 1987 Wanzleben Wernigerode Wolmirstedt ZerbstNeubrandenburg Urban districts Neubrandenburg from January 1969 Rural districts Altentreptow Anklam Demmin Malchin Neubrandenburg Land Neustrelitz Pasewalk Prenzlau Robel Muritz Strasburg Templin Teterow Ueckermunde WarenPotsdam Urban districts Potsdam Brandenburg an der HavelRural districts Belzig Brandenburg Gransee Juterbog Konigs Wusterhausen Kyritz Luckenwalde Nauen Neuruppin Oranienburg Potsdam Pritzwalk Rathenow Wittstock ZossenRostock Urban districts Rostock Greifswald from January 1974 Stralsund WismarRural districts Bad Doberan Greifswald Land Grevesmuhlen Grimmen Ribnitz Damgarten Rostock Land Rugen Stralsund Wismar WolgastSchwerin Urban districts SchwerinRural districts Butzow Gadebusch Gustrow Hagenow Ludwigslust Lubz Parchim Perleberg Schwerin Land SternbergSuhl Urban districts SuhlRural districts Bad Salzungen Hildburghausen Ilmenau Meiningen Neuhaus Schmalkalden Sonneberg Suhl LandList of Bezirke EditFrom north to south the Bezirke were Map Bezirk Area km Population 1989 Population density people km Licenceplates Internal divisions 1989 Municipalities Gemeinden nbsp Rostock 7 075 916 500 130 A 10 Landkreise 4 Stadtkreise 360 nbsp Schwerin 8 672 595 200 69 B 10 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 389 nbsp Neubrandenburg 10 948 620 500 57 C 14 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 492 nbsp Potsdam 12 568 1 123 800 89 D P 15 Landkreise 2 Stadtkreise 755 nbsp Frankfurt Oder 7 186 713 800 99 E 9 Landkreise 3 Stadtkreise 438 nbsp Magdeburg 11 526 1 249 500 108 H M 17 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 655 nbsp Cottbus 8 262 884 700 107 Z 14 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 574 nbsp Halle 8 771 1 776 500 203 K V 20 Landkreise 3 Stadtkreise 684 nbsp Leipzig 4 966 1 360 900 274 S U 12 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 422 nbsp Erfurt 7 349 1 240 400 169 L F 13 Landkreise 2 Stadtkreise 719 nbsp Dresden 6 738 1 757 400 261 R Y 15 Landkreise 2 Stadtkreise 594 nbsp Karl Marx Stadt 6 009 1 859 500 309 T X 21 Landkreise 3 Stadtkreise 601 nbsp Gera 4 004 742 000 185 N 11 Landkreise 2 Stadtkreise 528 nbsp Suhl 3 856 549 400 142 O 8 Landkreise 1 Stadtkreis 358 nbsp Berlin 403 1 279 200 3 174 I 11 Stadtbezirke 1DDR 108 333 16 669 300 154 191 Landkreise 27 Stadtkreise Ost Berlin 7 570 The Bezirk Karl Marx Stadt was named Bezirk Chemnitz for a short period at both the beginning and end of the republic corresponding with the renaming and reversal of the city Chemnitz Between 10 May 1953 and 30 May 1990 both the city and Bezirk were named Karl Marx Stadt East Berlin was not officially a Bezirk but from 1961 was provided with the function of one Reconstitution of the Lander Edit nbsp The reconstituted Lander in 1990 with borders in red The purple borders show the original borders pre 1952 On 23 August 1990 just over a month before German reunification on 3 October East Germany reconstituted the five original Lander Legally it was these Lander that then acceded to the Federal Republic of Germany 5 In reality the restored Lander did not fully reconstitute themselves until after reunification On 14 October 1990 elections to the Landtage state parliaments were held in the five new states initiating the formation of state governments Since changes to the boundaries of municipal districts were not reversed and also due to considerations of expediency the territorial make up of the restored Lander differed somewhat from the borders before 1952 Saxony and Saxony Anhalt initially retained the rural and urban districts as administrative entities Regierungsbezirke Saxony Anhalt later abolished them in 2003 while Saxony transformed them into directorates in 2008 See also EditList of leaders of administrative divisions of East GermanyReferences Edit Orlow Dietrich 1986 12 15 Weimar Prussia 1918 1925 The Unlikely Rock of Democracy University of Pittsburgh Pre pp 3 ISBN 9780822976400 prussia 1947 Helpful Hints for US Visitors to East Berlin PDF Headquarters U S Command Berlin 1981 11 09 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Architecture Politics and Identity in Divided Berlin Emily Pugh University of Pittsburgh Press 2014 pages 159 Grieder Peter 2012 11 02 The German Democratic Republic Palgrave Macmillan pp xviii ISBN 9780230356863 a b Illing Falk 2014 10 07 Die sachsische FDP seit 1990 Auf dem Weg zur etablierten Partei in German Springer Verlag p 71 ISBN 9783658046576 Horvath Gyula 2014 08 21 Spaces and Places in Central and Eastern Europe Historical Trends and Perspectives Routledge p 109 ISBN 9781317917540 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Subdivisions of the German Democratic Republic at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Administrative divisions of East Germany amp oldid 1169240855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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